Heiskell v. Golden City Foundry, Inc.

260 S.W.3d 443, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1110, 2008 WL 3876850
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 22, 2008
Docket29054
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 S.W.3d 443 (Heiskell v. Golden City Foundry, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heiskell v. Golden City Foundry, Inc., 260 S.W.3d 443, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1110, 2008 WL 3876850 (Mo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

ROBERT S. BARNEY, Judge.

Appellants Norman Heiskell (“Employee”), now deceased; Paula Heiskell *445 (“Wife”), Employee’s dependent spouse; and Employee’s dependent children, Char-issa Heiskell (“Charissa”) and Aaron Heis-kell (“Aaron”) (collectively “Appellants”) appeal from the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission’s (“the Commission”) “Final Award Denying Compensation” (“the Final Award”) for worker’s compensation benefits based on Employee’s death. Appellants assert two points of Commission error.

The record reveals that on November 19, 2003, Employee, a forty-eight-year-old man, passed away at his home due to a pulmonary embolism. Employee had been employed with Respondent Golden City Foundry, Inc. (“Employer”) for thirteen years and co-owned the company with his cousin, Tony Peterson (“Mr. Peterson”). 1

On August 19, 2004, a “Claim for Compensation” was filed by Appellants with the Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations, Division of Worker’s Compensation (“the Division”), based on Employee’s death “from complications due to work-related blunt trauma” he purportedly received in October of 2003. On September 24, 2004, a “Report of Injury” was filed with the Division by Appellants on Employee’s behalf. It set out that Employee had been injured while at work on October 31, 2003, at approximately 12:00 a.m.; however, no other details relating to how or where Employee was injured were included in the report. In their answer to Appellants’ claim, Employer and Insurer stated that while Employee was employed during the time of the alleged injury they were not notified of the injury as required by section 287.420 and, accordingly, Employer and Insurer denied all of Appellants’ claims. 2

On May 2, 2007, a hearing was held before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”). At the hearing on this matter, the deposition of Employee’s father, Norman Heiskell, Sr. (“Father”), was entered into evidence. Father testified that one morning in late October of 2003 he saw Employee walking down the sidewalk toward Employer’s place of business. He stated that Employee “was limping real bad” and that it was “[v]ery noticeable;” however, Father could not recall which leg appeared to be injured. When Father asked Employee about the limping, Employee stated he “about broke [his] leg” while at work when he was “loading something or moving something.” Father indicated he “wasn’t familiar with the equipment [Employee] was telling him about” and he “couldn’t get the picture of it exactly,” but he understood that “something fell off of something and dropped and hit [Employee] on the leg,” thus, causing him to limp. Father testified that Employee indicated the item which hit him “weighed about 500 pounds.” Employee told Father he would “be all right” and did not need help finishing work nor did he need to seek medical treatment. Father testified Employee was not the type of person to complain of such things and they did not discuss the issue again.

Father also testified that on November 16, 2003, three days prior to Employee’s death, Employee passed out at his home while preparing to go deer hunting with *446 his son. Employee was taken to the hospital for observation and his treating physician indicated Employee should stay in the hospital for 48 hours so that certain tests could be performed. Father stated Employee did not want to stay at the hospital and returned home the same day he was admitted. Father stated he checked on Employee several times in the next several days; however, on November 19, 2003, Employee suffered a pulmonary embolism and died at his home.

Employee’s daughter, Charissa, testified at the hearing that she was sixteen years old when her father passed away. She stated that “[a]bout three or four weeks” prior to Employee’s death he asked her for some “sports cream” for an injury he had on his upper thigh. When Charissa asked Employee the origin of his injury, Employee told him that “[h]e had hit himself on— a pallet had hit him in the leg at work.” She stated Employee disliked doctors and was not the type of person to complain or worry about injuries.

Employee’s son, Aaron, testified at the hearing that he was thirteen years old when Employee passed away. Aaron testified that he had one conversation with Employee about a leg injury about “three weeks before he passed away.” He related Employee also asked him for some sports cream for his leg. When Aaron asked about the injury, Employee told him he “was messing with a pallet ... and it started to fall and [he] had [gone] to catch it and it landed on his lower abdominal— on his leg.” Aaron stated it was “unusual for [Employee] to complain about pain,” which is the reason Aaron clearly recalled the conversation.

Aaron testified that the morning his father passed out as they were leaving to go deer hunting in November of 2003, he noticed Employee “had a little bit of a hitch maybe [in his leg] like it was almost stiff,” but he “wasn’t like limping, dragging his leg....” He stated Employee’s breathing was heavy that morning and he passed out on the front steps of the house. Aaron then alerted Wife and Employee was transported to the hospital via ambulance. Employee later checked himself out of the hospital against medical advice and died at home three days later.

Wife testified that Employee had diabetes for which he was prescribed medicine, but that he only “sometimes” took his pills. She stated she was unaware that Employee was suffering from “any ongoing problems, symptoms, weakness or anything like that from diabetes ...” prior to his death. She stated Employee never complained about “pain and bumps and bruises and aches ...” and that he disliked doctors. Wife testified she was not aware of any accident Employee may have had at work prior to his death. She stated Employee probably did not tell her about the accident because he knew she would want him to go to the doctor.

George Nichols (“Mr. Nichols”), a friend of Employee’s, testified via deposition, that in November of 2003 he observed Employee “kind of limping.” He related that he asked Employee what he had done and Employee stated “ ‘Oh, I was acting stupid and hurt myself a little.’ ” He stated he saw Employee limping “for two or three days” and that was the only conversation he had with Employee about the injury.

On Appellants’ behalf, the deposition and medical report of Dr. P. Brent Kopri-vica (“Dr. Koprivica”) was entered into evidence. In his deposition, Dr. Koprivica testified that he believed, based “solely” on Father’s deposition relating to the supposed work-related injury, that Employee was injured while at work, which “caused the deep venous thrombosis which is a blood clot in the extremity that embolized to cause the pulmonary embolism.” Dr. *447

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 S.W.3d 443, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1110, 2008 WL 3876850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heiskell-v-golden-city-foundry-inc-moctapp-2008.